"It was a real good ballgame. We just didn't execute a couple
pitches and we got burnt," Tigers' manager Jim Leyland said.

Manny Ramirez led off the 10th with a single and went to second
when Ryan Raburn stumbled and booted the ball in left. Alejandro
De Aza ran for Ramirez, and pinch-hitter Alex Rios hit a single
one out later to send De Aza to third. Pierzynski followed with
a looper into short left field on a 1-2 pitch to bring in De Aza
and give the White Sox the lead.

"We're just going in there (each at-bat) to fight and see what
happens," said Pierzynski, who was 2 for 5 to extend his hitting
streak to 13 games.

Alexei Ramirez's two-out single in the eighth had tied the game
at 4 for the White Sox.

Detroit starter Max Scherzer was replaced by Phil Coke after
Andruw Jones' one-out single in the eighth. Coke got Pierzynski
to fly out to the warning track in right and was replaced by
Ryan Perry. Brent Lillibridge, running for Jones, stole second
and Ramirez sent a liner into left-center to tie the game.

"Definitely made a mistake to Ramirez, which he capitalized on,"
Perry said.

The Tigers' Brandon Inge hit a drive down the left-field line
and into the stands with two outs and one on in the eighth that
was originally called a home run. The call was overruled when
replay clearly showed the ball was foul.

"It started so far fair as soon as it came off and then it
started hooking early. Then I just had a feeling. You can kind
of tell," Inge said. "It didn't quite get there. I knew it was
gone. I knew it had the distance, just didn't have the
direction."

Detroit took a 2-0 lead when the first three batters got hits,
but Chicago tied it in the second on Pierzynski's bases-loaded
single.

The White Sox went ahead 3-2 in the fourth on Pierre's two out,
run-scoring single. Chicago nearly added another run, but
Tigers' right fielder Brennan Boesch threw Mark Kotsay out at
the plate as he tried to score from second on Omar Vizquel's
single.

Miguel Cabrera led off with a single and Kelly drove Edwin
Jackson's next pitch into the right-field stands for his sixth
home run, giving Detroit a 4-3 lead.

Scherzer allowed four runs on nine hits in 7 1-3 innings,
walking two and striking out six.

Edwin Jackson gave up four runs on nine hits in 7 1-3 innings,
walking one and striking out six.

NOTES: Vizquel passed Rafael Palmeiro for most games by a player
born outside the United States (2,832), according to the Elias
Sports Bureau. ... Chicago 1B Paul Konerko sat out because of a
stiff back. ... The Rev. Jesse Jackson was in attendance. ...
Kelly made two outstanding catches in LF. He robbed Kotsay of a
hit with a diving catch to his left with two on and none out in
the second, and victimized Vizquel with his back to the diamond
and running toward the left-field foul pole as he led off the
third.